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Everything posted by Drew Dowdell
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Different strokes. My enthusiasm for cars has never been about raw speed.
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More power, more gears, but no improvement in performance? Does not compute.
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The 5-cylinder Volvos have interesting maintenance schedules. They have flame traps and oil traps that need to be cleaned out and replaced at like 70k miles or you burn up the engine. 50 cent part, $400 labor to complete the job because once you open the hood you have to dig all the way to Sweden to get to it.
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I've cleared the theme cache. Let me know if the problem continues.
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GMC News: 2019 GMC Sierra Begins to Differentiate Itself
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in GMC Trucks
I'm very trim-level specific in my preferences. 1. '19 Ram 1500 (Limited or Rebel), Hemi 2. '18 Ford F-150 King Ranch or Limited, 5.0 3. '19 GMC Sierra 1500 Denali or SLT, any V8 4. '18 GMC Sierra 1500 Denali or All-Terrain 5. '18 Chevy Silverado 1500 - Z71 of any trim... whatever it takes to get all that chrome off the front. 6. '19 Chevy Silverado 1500 - I might be talked into a High Country for the right deal, but I'm more likely to go for an '18 leftover instead just based on appearances. -
GMC News: 2019 GMC Sierra Begins to Differentiate Itself
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in GMC Trucks
I'm still not seeing it. GM specifically targeted the use of aluminum in the bed material, not in body panels. GM has been using aluminum hoods and doors on other vehicles for years. If the carbon fiber bed is more dent resistant than steel or aluminum, there is no hypocrisy there. GM's original "man step" goes back to at least 2002 and was always a far simpler and graceful solution than Ford's. The Ford man step is still a rickity looking piece and is overly complicated. Having a built in cane just puts the cherry on top. Watching the video on the GMC shows it to be simpler in operation than the Ford. I'm not blown away by the GM trucks, I like the new Ram better...but GM did get these two things right. -
Buick News: 2019 Buick Envision Adds More Gears, Lowers Price
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Buick
See, that seems just odd to me. Those should be pretty standard GM parts. Is the seat belt buckle really that different between an Envision, Encore, and Enclave? If so, then that's some pretty bad product planning there. However, I could totally see internal corporate bureaucracy doing that. -
GMC News: 2019 GMC Sierra Begins to Differentiate Itself
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in GMC Trucks
I'm not getting what you're referencing here with the Sierra tho... -
Sales: Sales Figure Ticker: February 2018
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Sales Figure Ticker
Up until the coming 2019 Envision, the Terrain had some distinct technical advantages over the Buick, but for 2019 they are more evenly matched. I do think the Terrain is a bit overpriced, but if you can get over that, then something like a $45k Terrain Denali Turbo Diesel does have some advantages over an equivalently priced Envision. The Terrain also does feel slightly more roomy even if the numbers don't play that out. The base model engine of the Terrain is better than the base model engine of the Envision, and for some reason Buick makes you pony up for the 2.0T to get AWD when AWD can come in the 1.5T in the Terrain. Pluses and minuses all around depending on your priorities. Edit: Apparently my knowledge was out of date and you can get the 2.5 with AWD in the Envision. That must have been a first year only thing. -
Sales: Sales Figure Ticker: February 2018
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Sales Figure Ticker
Er... the Terrain does not have any naturally aspirated engines at all. It has the 1.5T, 2.0T, and 1.6TD. I was talking about the RAV4 being only NA 2.5 or Hybrid 2.5 -
GMC News: 2019 GMC Sierra Begins to Differentiate Itself
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in GMC Trucks
Don't fret. There will still be GMC work trucks. Work trucks are generally not news makers, so that's why you haven't seen anything about them. Flash (Denali) and wow (MultiPro) are what generate headlines, not base model white trucks that will be found at a local construction firm. I like the MultiPro gate, but I wonder the weight it can support. It would be good for hauling a motorcycle. -
Sales: Sales Figure Ticker: February 2018
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Sales Figure Ticker
I get that... but when I cross the $30k mark, I want more than a naturally aspirated 4-cylinder. Not an option in a RAV4 -
Sales: Sales Figure Ticker: February 2018
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Sales Figure Ticker
At least in the Terrain's case, it sells at the top end of its price range. -
You know it's more than exterior length. The interior of the Kicks is most politely described as "snug".
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Sales: Sales Figure Ticker: February 2018
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Sales Figure Ticker
At lease some of the price of the Terrain comes from the powertrain. You get your choice of a naturally aspirated 4-cylinder with a 6-speed auto or a Hybrid 4-cylinder with a 6-speed auto. The Terrain at the higher prices gets you a 2.0t and 10-speed or the new Turbo-diesel. I have an issue paying $34k for a naturally aspirated 4-cylinder in a economy crossover -
The Kicks is substantially smaller than the Rogue. Much less horsepower. FWD only. Feels smaller than my Encore inside. The Rogue is a 3-row crossover these days, slightly bigger than the Chevy Equinox. Then there is the Rogue Sport, a tweener about the size of a Subaru Crosstrek or Jeep Compass.
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Sales: Sales Figure Ticker: February 2018
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Sales Figure Ticker
$37k for a RAV4 and $47k for a Terrain is overpriced. -
GMC News: 2019 GMC Sierra Begins to Differentiate Itself
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in GMC Trucks
Love the exterior. Not sold on the interior of the Chevy, so not sure some fancy trim is going to help. Another power train announcement is coming later this month. -
And the $175 oil changes.
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We need to fund a Kickstarter to buy Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep/Ram and make Ralph Gilles CEO
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The Volt may not make sense in that situation new, but for a $13k car with 30k miles it's really compelling. It's also built better than the Cruze. I know Balthazar had previously eliminated the Regal otherwise I would have suggested it. Veranos have the same cost/age/miles equation as the Volt, but don't get the fuel economy and are not a hatchback. A Fusion could work, but I was trying to keep it within the size restriction Balthazar mentioned.
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If Geely could do for Dodge/Chrysler/Jeep/Ram what they did for Volvo.... yes I would definitely take them over Fiat.
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Fiat News: Rumorpile: FCA Considers Calling It Quits on Diesel
Drew Dowdell replied to William Maley's topic in Fiat
As with all things, it depends on how you use it. If you already own a boat or camper that you tow often... if you are using your truck for hauling work like my parents do.... then diesel will make up the cost sooner. Using a gasoline turbo V6 in that way will cause the fuel economy to drop much faster than it would with a diesel. That said, I want to remind people that you should never measure the ROI in years but in miles. I have a friend who leases his vehicles and barely does 20k miles in 3 years where as Balth might do 20k in a year. -
They already severely restrict older gasoline cars in cities. Your inspection sticker comes with a certain color, Red, Yellow, Green, or (I think) Blue. Blue is for EVs. R/Y/G is based on emissions and carbon levels and older cars usually can't keep up. Red cars aren't allowed in City centers during certain hours, typically the workday hours. Classics get special passes, but have to meet other requirements such as maximum mileage per year, etc.
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The engine revs do change, but entirely independent of the vehicular motion. It seems to be programmed to have different RPM levels depending on the demand at a given moment. If the battery is near depletion and you are pulling up a long hill at highway speed, the engine will run at a higher RPM than if it is just regenerating at a leisurely pace. Depletion in a Volt does not mean that the battery has gone to zero. GM left a reserve in there, so the engine will run even at 30% just to keep the battery well managed. On the rolling hills here in PA, and being gentle on it, I've managed 75 mpg on a depleted battery. Edit: First Gen Volts also ask for premium fuel. This is largely because they operate at a higher than typical RPM when the engine is running and it is more efficient to run higher octane / higher compression. The current generation Volt added direct injection and no longer has the premium fuel requirement...it operates just fine on regular.